Arabin; or, The Adventures of a Settler

Last updated

Arabin; or, The Adventures of a Settler
Arabin or Adventures.png
Melbourne Daily News 9 March 1849
Written byJames McLachlin
Based onnovel Adventures of a colonist, or, Godfrey Arabin the settler
by Thomas McCombie
Date premiered9 March 1849 [1]
Place premieredQueen Theatre Royal, Melbourne
Original languageEnglish

Arabin; or, The Adventures of a Settler is an 1849 Australian stage play by James McLachlin. [2] [3] It was arguably the first Australian play presented in Melbourne. [4]

It was based on the 1845 book Adventures of a colonist, or, Godfrey Arabin the settler by Thoms McCombie. A full copy of the play survives. [3] According to academic Richard Fotheringham, "except for the introduction of a predictable comic Irish servant and his sweetheart, the stage Arabin follows McCombie’s narrative closely; indeed several cryptic references in the play can only be understood by referring to the novel." [5]

The production featured songs. [6]

According to William Kerr in the Argus, who disliked McCombie, the play was written by McCombie and would be "interspersed with Songs written by" McCombie "to music no doubt composed by the same universal Genius. The author is also to deliver a Prologue of his own composition. In short, it is a perfect McCombie triumph, and we strongly recommend an attendance to such of our readers as relish a bit of fun." [7]

McCombie pointed out to Kerr that McLachlin wrote the play and songs, not him. "In a flattering notice which one of our contemporaries bestowed upon this piece, it is stated that the prologue was to be spoken by Mr. McCombie. We need not say that this is an error; the author of tho drams was advertised to speak it, and it would be unfair to him to deprive him of the honor." [8] [3]

McLaughlin and McCombie later collaborated on another play Jackey Jackey the NSW Bushranger . [3]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Westwood (bushranger)</span>

William Westwood, also known as Jackey Jackey, was an English-born convict who became a bushranger in Australia.

There were two Australian periodicals called The Port Phillip Gazette.

The MacMahon brothers were entrepreneurs in Australian show business. Chief among them were James MacMahon and Charles MacMahon, who together and separately toured a large number of stage shows. Their younger brothers, Joseph and William, were involved in many of those activities.

Frederick Hart Pollock was an actor and publican, remembered as the lessee-manager of the Theatre Royal, Adelaide, South Australia.

The Lorgnette, subtitled "Theatrical Journal and Programme", was a weekly magazine in Melbourne, Australia, devoted to theatre, opera and the concert stage. The magazine was published Saturdays and sold for 2d at the major entertainment venues where it had exclusive rights, and elsewhere.

The Record was a weekly newspaper published in South Melbourne, Victoria, from 1869 to at least 1954, serving Port Melbourne, Albert Park, Middle Park, and Garden City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bijou Theatre, Melbourne</span> Former theatre in Melbourne, Australia

The first theatre on the site at 217-223 Bourke Street, Melbourne was the Victorian Academy of Music, built for Samuel Aarons, which opened with a performance by Ilma de Murska on 6 November 1876. Seating about 1600, it was designed by Reed & Barnes, and located on a deep site, with the theatre at the rear, located above a wide passageway running through the site, called the Victoria Arcade. The arcade featured billiard and refreshment rooms, and access to the theatre was from a grand stair off Bourke Street, as well as stairs running off the arcade.

Eduardo Majeroni was an actor who toured the world with Adelaide Ristori, playing popular Italian dramas in their original language. He and his wife Giulia, a niece of Ristori, left the company in Australia and carved out a career playing the same repertoire in English translations. Giulia was an actress, and their two sons Mario and George had acting careers in America.

The Haymarket Theatre, or Royal Haymarket Theatre was a live theatre built by George Coppin in the Haymarket district of Melbourne, Australia in 1862 and was destroyed by fire in 1871.

Frederick Charles Appleton was an Australian actor, noted as a Shakespearean character actor, a "painstaking studious aspirant for histrionic honours", praised for his "considerable ability and tact". In 1883 he earned an academic degree and became a university lecturer, an unusual conjugation of careers, shared with H. B. Irving.

William Hoskins was a Shakespearean actor from England whose later career was mostly in Australia and New Zealand, reputedly "one of the best actors who has ever trod our stage".

Frederick George Younge was an English comic actor, in Australia for six years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise Pomeroy</span> American actress

Louise M. Pomeroy née Ryder was an American actress and writer who was popular in Shakespearean roles in Australia.

George Leitch was an English actor-manager and dramatist who had a substantial career in Australia.

George Benjamin William Lewis commonly referred to as G. B. W. Lewis, or G. B. Lewis, was an English circus performer, later a circus and theatre entrepreneur in Australia. He married in 1864 the actress and playwright Rose Edouin.

The House That Jack Built; or, Harlequin Progress, and the Love's Laughs, Laments and Labors is a 1869 Australian stage play by William Mower Akhurst. It was adapted for Sydney audiences by an unknown author in 1871.

For Love and Life is a 1890 Australian play by Alfred Dampier and Garnet Walch about hypnotism, a topic then very fashionable in London.

<i>Wilful Murder</i> (play)

Wilful Murder is a 1892 Australian play by Alfred Dampier and Garnet Walch. The play adapted George Meredith's British play Drama of London Life, incorporating elements of the recent Windsor murder by Frederick Bailey Deeming.

The Rebel Chief is a 1849 Australian stage play by Francis Belfield. It was produced at a time when Australian plays were extremely rare.

<i>Jackey Jackey the NSW Bushranger</i>

Jackey Jackey the NSW Bushranger is a 1852 Australian play by James McLachlin about the bushranger William Westwood known as "Jackey Jackey" He wrote it in collaboration with Thomas McCombie, after having successfully adapted McCombie's Arabin; or, The Adventures of a Settler.

References

  1. "Last Night of the Season". The Lorgnette . Vol. XLI. Victoria, Australia. 16 June 1886. p. 2 (Edition 3). Retrieved 5 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "Advertising". The Melbourne Daily News . Vol. XII, no. 1, 895. Victoria, Australia. 8 March 1849. p. 3. Retrieved 5 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Fotheringham, Richard (2006). Australian plays for the colonial stage : 1834–1899. pp. 96–105.
  4. "Queen's Theatre Royal". The Lorgnette . Vol. XLI. Victoria, Australia. 16 June 1886. p. 2 (Edition 1). Retrieved 11 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.
  5. Fotheringham p 98
  6. "Domestic Gazette". Port Phillip Gazette and Settler's Journal . Vol. IX, no. 1881. Victoria, Australia. 7 March 1849. p. 2. Retrieved 11 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "Domestic Intelligence". The Argus (Melbourne) . Vol. I, no. 56. Victoria, Australia. 9 March 1849. p. 2. Retrieved 11 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.
  8. "Domestic Gazette". Port Phillip Gazette and Settler's Journal . Vol. IX, no. 1882. Victoria, Australia. 10 March 1849. p. 2. Retrieved 11 May 2024 via National Library of Australia.